Week05: Body talk: Will Eisner and Craig Thompson

This week I watched Craig Thompson's Blankets Part 1; the story is a graphic novel from the boy's first-person point of view, Craig. The graphic novel is characterized by the fact that the screen is very free to use panels. Especially, there is a part of Craig's situation that is developed into imagination. In Chapter 1, 42-43, the whole is used and the image of two pages is connected. It was much easier to read the character's feelings by slowly developing the situation than the comics.

Because English is a second language for me, it takes more time to read the situation or context when I see a normal comic, and sometimes I do not understand it. But this book was better read than I thought, and I thought why, and what the professor told me in class told me the answer. In fact, when we read people’s emotions, we think facial expressions are the most important thing, but this graphic novel has a very detailed body movement. Various body movements made the speaker's feelings more accurate and empathic to the reader. After hearing the explanation, I focused on the gesture rather than the expression to appreciate the story again, and the emotion was more intensely incorporated.

Compared to Marvel Comics, I read it a little more distantly because the world view is very different from reality, while Blankets part 1 is harassed by other school children in Craig and is not protected by parents. I went from elementary school to high school, so I was very sad to see it in space. And even the world of fear that I imagined when I went to a dark space became very sympathetic. Overall, graphic novels had good illustrations that allowed them to feel emotions and motion well.

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